Prime

Tuesday

I went to bed early on Monday night, and set the alarm for a generous 8 hours, but ended up sleeping in past my alarm. I’ve been taking Nyquil before bed, but it doesn’t make sense to me that it would make me sluggish in the morning. At any rate, I rolled into work well past when I wanted to.

I did some tidying up and busywork, but, as per the last few weeks, my heart hasn’t been in my work recently. There has just been too much.

When I got home, I prepared myself some food, and watched the new episodes of Girls and Looking. Girls had a spotty last season, and the first two episodes of this new one weren’t that great either, but this week’s (Episode 3) was really great. I’m very willpower- and empowerment-minded right now, and I love watching Marnie and Hannah come into their own, even as they are terrible and awkward in their manner. Adam and Jessa are such a natural pair I can’t believe we haven’t seen them play off of each other before.

Looking still doesn’t realize who its interesting characters are, but Patrick was almost funny and charming and we got to see a little bit of the beautiful Raúl Castro. I’m worried that he’s going to hook up with Agustín, which would be a waste, but I’m just glad that he’s not gone forever. Please don’t make him get back with Patrick.

I got the last of my weekend Charliework done, and had one of those blissful moments where my bed was made with fresh bedding and I had just taken a shower and I was in a robe and I had tea and was just lazing. My mom and my sister decided that they wanted to read Moby-Dick this year, so I started the first few chapters. I think I might be the only one that’s started. 

Wednesday

Nyquil fog again. Bought lunch, was trying to only prepare my own food this week.

Nothing special at work.

Got started on Anne Lamott’s Bird by Bird, which is kind of about writing and also about just doing what you are meant to do. I realize that I’m deep in a wheel-spinning cycle of inspiration addiction, and decided to stop reading the book and take a month or so break from big picture writing, and use my time to either make work or read some primary text—take in books, movies, whatever.

I became fascinated with this New Yorker story about Yitang Zhang, a mathematician that solved some old problem. As you can tell, my grasp of the math is scant, but Zhang emerges as a fascinating human character, almost an artist:

A few years ago, Zhang sold his car, because he didn’t really use it. He rents an apartment about four miles from campus and rides to and from his office with students on a school shuttle. He says that he sits on the bus and thinks. Seven days a week, he arrives at his office around eight or nine and stays until six or seven. The longest he has taken off from thinking is two weeks. Sometimes he wakes in the morning thinking of a math problem he had been considering when he fell asleep. Outside his office is a long corridor that he likes to walk up and down. Otherwise, he walks outside.

Zhang worked on this problem with no outside encouragement or support for more then a decade while working as an adjunct. Before that, unable to find a professorship, he worked as a bookkeeper at a Subway franchise. Although it seems he is superintelligent, it is his complete focus that is inspiring. From another interview:

I am a quiet person. I like to concentrate on the math, on what I like. I do not care about the life conditions, like a good house, good cars, good clothing. This is my personality. I don’t have a car right now. I have a townhouse, but it is in California, where my wife lives. In New Hampshire I rent an apartment. The most important thing is to concentrate on math itself.

I don’t have any confidence that I’ll ever find that focus, nor really any desire to. I like good house, good clothing (we share our indifference to cars). But one of the reasons that I’ve always found a kinship to the pure math/pure physics crowd is that, like music, they are things that are outside of words and semantic reasoning—words will always be a metaphor, and it is possible to think in the thing without needing words at all. Sometimes when I can get all the voices in my head quiet, I can get to that place where I’m just thinking and being in music and sound, no words. I don’t feel that same thing about numbers, but if somebody else does, I understand wanting to be in that state as much as possible.

I called my mom, talked for a little bit. Realized that my car is not worth much, so my fantasy of trading it in for something smaller and more energy efficient is not just a fantasy, but a pretty stupid one at that.

I had a long, emotional conversation with my brother. My heart breaks for him right now, because he’s 18 and out of school, and he has some things to figure out right now that are twisting him around. Even the questions he’s asking make me think that he’s on a truer path faster than I was—I was stubborn enough to stick to a contract I thought I had to stick to (a contract that I invented, that nobody asked me to sign, and that never made sense in the first place) for another two or three years before it ran out of gas and I had to try and build myself again from scratch.

Dumpling

Gentle reader, I find myself once again ill.

After dealing with pneumonia this winter, to feel so weakened by a simple cold feels like an insult. 

My grandmother was a great lover of talking about her illnesses. I found it very boring, so I’ll shut up now.

So, I guess I should be careful about shutting the door on a day before it’s finished. After yesterday’s perfunctory update, my sister chatted me which turned into an hour-and-a-half conversation about motivation, personal growth, what it means to finish things and finish things well, and explore some of the personal revelation/resolution territory that I’ve been in for the past week. We discussed Carol Dweck’s Mindset, which has been my jam over the last six months. It was strange to see her come at some of the same problems that I worried about as a student. I don’t think I’m that much further along in untangling my own human contradictions than she is, but it was interesting to hear her articulate ideas that I’ve had before but now think of as dead ends. For example, I no longer think about my own “motivation” or “laziness,” and tend to see my good and bad habits and desired and undesired behaviors as a product of feedback that feels good or other conditions. That’s really wordy: basically, I’ve stopped beating myself up about being lazy when there is another obvious explanation, like fear or lack of feedback, or lack of self-confidence. 

One of my goals for the new year was to work on the relationship I have with my brother and sister, and I am so happy that we are all talking right now.

I slept in and was a little late getting in to work in the morning. Our work phone has been down for three weeks—it’s so embarrassing that there seems to be no person in the whole organization with the combination of competence and authority to get a simple thing resolved—and I was so demoralized to be at work. It’s been a rough winter after a rough summer, and I have so little confidence in my workplace right now I’m starting to make myself crazy with how much I want a new job. As I was setting up the room for the day, I called my mom. I started to talk about where my head has been with trying to give myself room to dream of new possibilities (I know that’s all very vague, but I’m not yet ready to write even semipublicly about it yet). It ended up being a very raw and open conversation about some of the things that had happened to me as a teenager that made me a much more fearful person than the fearless child I had been. I got very emotional when she said to me that she thought that I deserved to go after what I wanted, to chase after dreams.

I got very excited about Portland’s first Dumpling Week. I’m still waiting to see if it’s going to be affordable, the only reason I could try Burger Week burgers is that prices were set at $5. One of the commenters on the Facebook announcement remarked on the fact that there were no restaurants east of 82nd on the list. [For out of towners, the area of Portland east of 82nd Avenue is where most of the recent Asian immigration has moved to.] At first, I resisted that critique, because its clearly an effort to support a fine dining scene, and it just doesn’t bother me that restaurants in a certain cost range, fanciness, and food aesthetic were selected to participate. At the same time, I thought about how the cruelty of this kind of appropriation is that the white majority sees a subcultural product/object/tradition/design, copies its most superficial aspects in a game of cultural telephone, then siphons away the profits from that subculture. But then I was thinking that a) the idea that any one culture could own a food form like the dumpling is ludicrous. b) the dumplings are just not the same. I understand wanting to identify with the romanticized family restaurant that’s making grandma’s dumplings and nobody cares and the big bad white haute cuisine restaurant across the river makes the same thing and everybody goes apeshit. But that’s not reality. The reality is that those restaurants have completely different ways of communicating about food, sourcing ingredients, presentation, restaurant design, and pretending like all that stuff isn’t important or meaningful is silly. Nevertheless, I’ve been thinking about it all day and don’t feel like I have an “answer.”

Speaking of race and culture, I was hit with two very interesting pieces that dealt with race and classical music in a way that made my soul hurt a little bit. The first was an essay on Wagner and anti-Semitism. I’ve never liked Wagner, there’s plenty of other composers to listen to, I find most of his aesthetic very creepy, and there’s something about his arrogance at claiming that all people must love his music that makes me resist it. Anyway, the choice that the essay tries to force is: either you believe that abstract music, just sound, has the ability to convey a spiritual message, in which case Wagner’s music itself, even that without words, is anti-semitic and abhorrent. Or, as much as we talk about why we love the music, music is incapable of carrying that kind of message and to speak of it as though it is is deceptive/cultish. Read it, if any of that sounds interesting. The second was a Jezebel post about a black woman that had a racist interaction with an older white patron at the Met during a production of Aida. The interaction, whatever. Racist, and shameful that she got no support from the ushers, but racist individuals can be rude anywhere. The part that broke my heart was that she is so completely right about the racist casting conventions of major opera houses. They are decades behind film and TV, neither of which are particularly good at imagination and casting or representation. The other thing that upset me is that if that happened to me, I would never go back.

Work was fine. I lost steam throughout the day, and by the end of the day I was completely burnt out from feeling sick. I got home and downloaded a bunch of new music to listen to, but mostly just dozed. Hopefully tomorrow isn’t too bad.